| Literature DB >> 34706900 |
James Vassallo1,2, Saisakul Chernbumroong3,4, Nabeela Malik3,4, Yuanwei Xu4, Damian Keene5, George Gkoutos6,7, Mark D Lyttle8, Jason Smith2,9.
Abstract
INTRODUCTION: Triage is a key principle in the effective management of major incidents. There is currently a paucity of evidence to guide the triage of children. The aim of this study was to perform a comparative analysis of nine adult and paediatric triage tools, including the novel 'Sheffield Paediatric Triage Tool' (SPTT), assessing their ability in identifying patients needing life-saving interventions (LSIs).Entities:
Keywords: clinical care; major incident; major incidents; paediatrics; planning; triage
Year: 2021 PMID: 34706900 PMCID: PMC9510399 DOI: 10.1136/emermed-2021-211706
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Emerg Med J ISSN: 1472-0205 Impact factor: 3.814
Triage tool comparison
| Tool | Tool components | ||||||
| 1st step | 2nd step | 3rd step | 4th step | 5th step | 6th step | 7th step | |
| Paediatric Triage Tape (PTT) | <10 kg: | Breathing | RR: | Capillary refill: <2 s | HR: | ||
| JumpSTART | Walking? | Breathing | If apnoeic, assess for pulse. If present, give 5 rescue breaths. | RR: <15 or >45 | Palpable pulse? | Conscious level assessment (AVPU)§ | |
| Sheffield Paediatric Triage Tool (SPTT) | Catastrophic haemorrhage? | Walking? | Breathing | If apnoeic, assess for pulse. If present, give 5 rescue breaths. | Responds to voice? | Age-appropriate RR?* | Age-appropriate HR† |
| Careflight | Walking? | Obeys commands? | Palpable radial pulse? OR Breathes with open airway? | – | – | – | – |
| Major Incident Medical Management and Support (MIMMS) Triage Sieve | Walking? | Breathing | RR: <10 or ≥30 | HR: >120 | – | – | – |
| Modified Physiological | Catastrophic haemorrhage? | Walking? | Breathing? Open airway if required. | Responds to voice? | RR: <12 or ≥24 | HR: ≥100 | – |
| Modified Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment | Walking? | Spontaneous breathing | RR: >30 | Radial pulse absent | Obeys commands | – | – |
| National Ambulance Service Medical Directors (NASMeD) Triage Sieve | Catastrophic haemorrhage | Are they injured? | Walking? | Breathing? Openairway if required | Unconscious | RR: <10 or ≥30 | Pulse >120 or capillary refill >2 s |
| Rapid Assessment of | Casualty without signs of obvious death | Casualty follows commands | Radial pulse present? | – | – | – | – |
*RR: <1: 30–40, 1–2: 25–25, 2–5: 25–30, 5–12: 20–25, >12: 15–20.
†HR: <1: 110–160, 1–2: 100–150, 2–5: 95–140, 5–12: 80–120, >12: 60–100.
‡MPTT-24 was updated in 2018 following consultation with NHS England to explicitly include the ‘open airway’ step as part of the breathing assessment.17 This current version is currently in use in both UK military and civilian in-hospital practice (within the NHS Clinical Guidelines for Major Incidents).10
§AVPU: Alert, responds to Voice, responds to Pain, Unconscious.
Figure 1Study flow diagram.
Age group breakdown and data completeness
| Age | Under 1 | 1–2 years | 2–5 years | 5–12 years | 12–16 years | |
| Frequency (n (%))* | 2072 (13.7) | 1261 (8.3) | 3045 (20.1) | 4572 (30.21) | 4183 (27.6) | N=15 133 ( |
| Complete prehospital physiology (n (%)) | 145 (2.9) | 59 (1.2) | 445 (9.0) | 1915 (38.6) | 2398 (48.3) | N=4962 ( |
| Complete first available physiology (n (%))† | 508 (24.5) | 260 (20.6) | 1093 (35.9) | 3095 (67.7) | 3299 (78.9) | N=8255 ( |
| Complete first available physiology (n (%))‡ | 1178 (56.7) | 675 (53.5) | 2044 (67.1) | 3755 (82.1) | 3631 (86.8) | N=11 283 ( |
*Overall study population age <16 years, n=15 133.
†Complete first available physiological data (ED and prehospital physiological data).
‡Complete first available physiological data (ED and prehospital physiological) using imputed data.
Characteristics of study population
| Variable | Category/stats | Complete population (n=15 133) | Complete prehospital data | Complete first available data (n=8255, 54.5%) |
| Gender | Male | 10 294 (68.0%) | 3447 (69.5%) | 5682 (68.8%) |
| Female | 4839 (32.0%) | 1515 (30.5%) | 2573 (31.2%) | |
| Injury Severity Score (median (IQR)) | 9 (9–16) | 9 (9–17) | 9 (9–16) | |
| Age (years) (median (IQR)) | 7 (2.3–12.5) | 11.9 (8–14.2) | 10.7 (5.6–13.8) | |
| Outcome | Alive | 14 764 (97.6%) | 4909 (98.9%) | 8188 (99.2%) |
| Dead | 369 (2.4%) | 53 (1.1%) | 67 (0.8%) | |
| Mode of injury | Blunt | 14 668 (96.9%) | 4733 (95.4%) | 7912 (95.8%) |
| Penetrating | 465 (3.1%) | 229 (4.6%) | 343 (4.2%) | |
| Mechanism of injury (n (%)) | Fall less than 2 m | 6014 (39.7) | 1187 (23.9) | 2374 (28.8) |
| Vehicle incident/collision | 4721 (31.2) | 2459 (49.6) | 3616 (43.8) | |
| Fall more than 2 m | 1514 (10.0) | 645 (13.0) | 1031 (12.5) | |
| Blow(s) | 1270 (8.4) | 327 (6.6) | 601 (7.3) | |
| Other | 1118 (7.4) | 147 (3.0) | 319 (3.9) | |
| Stabbing | 229 (1.5) | 130 (2.6) | 196 (2.4) | |
| Crush | 160 (1.1) | 42 (0.9) | 73 (0.9) | |
| Burn | 44 (0.3) | 4 (0.1) | 12 (0.2) | |
| Shooting | 42 (0.3) | 16 (0.3) | 24 (0.3) | |
| Blast | 21 (0.1) | 5 (0.1) | 9 (0.1) | |
| Priority one (n (%)) | 2820 (18.6) | 875 (17.6) | 1349 (16.3) |
Test characteristics with 95% CIs
| (A) Life-saving interventions, n=4962 (32.8%) | ||||
| Tool | Sensitivity | Specificity | Undertriage | Overtriage |
| SPTT | 92.2 (90.5 to 93.7) | 12.1 (11.1 to 13.2) | 7.8% | 75.0% |
| PTT | 34.1 (31.4 to 36.9) | 85.8 (84.6 to 86.9) | 65.9% | 56.7% |
| JumpSTART | 45.0 (42.1 to 47.8) | 92.1 (91.1 to 92.9) | 55.1% | 35.7% |
| MPTT-24 | 80.8 (78.4 to 83.0) | 39.6 (38.0 to 41.2) | 19.2% | 70.2% |
| Careflight | 44.4 (41.5 to 47.2) | 94.9 (94.1 to 95.6) | 55.6% | 26.7% |
| MIMMS | 41.6 (38.8 to 44.5) | 79.6 (78.3 to 80.9) | 58.4 | 60.7% |
| NASMeD | 51.9 (49.0 to 54.7) | 79.1 (77.8 to 80.4) | 48.1% | 55.9% |
| RAMP | 43.8 (41.0 to 46.6) | 94.9 (94.1 to 95.6) | 56.2% | 26.8% |
| MSTART | 53.9 (51.0 to 56.7) | 88.1 (87.0 to 89.1) | 46.1% | 41.0% |
ISS, Injury Severity Score; MIMMS, Major Incident Medical Management and Support; MPTT-24, Modified Physiological Triage Tool-24; MSTART, Modified Simple Triage and Rapid Treatment; NASMeD, National Ambulance Service Medical Directors; PTT, Paediatric Triage Tape; RAMP, Rapid Assessment of Mentation and Pulse; SPTT, Sheffield Paediatric Triage Tool.